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Artist in Residence Program

In 2015, Folk Alliance International launched an annual Artist in Residence (AIR) pilot to develop partnerships, foster cultural cross-pollination, and nurture artistic growth. To see the upcoming 2018 AIR program, please visit: folkconference.org/AIR.

2018: Percussive Fingerstyle Guitar Acrobatics

PROJECT: explored the connection between music, sound, mathematics, and art.

ARTIST: Henry Nam

PARTICIPANTS: the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s Math and Stat Department, sound and media arts students of the Kansas City Art Institute

Henry Nam is a percussive fingerstyle acoustic guitar solo act following in the footsteps of Michael Hedges, Leo Kottke, Don Ross, and Preston Reed. Born on a US military base in the Republic of Korea, raised in San Francisco, Germany, Maryland, and Philadelphia and currently based in Washington DC, musician and autodidact Henry Nam is the product of an international, multicultural upbringing that manifests not only in his diverse musical styling but also in his attitudes about the role of the arts as a universal language able to help people of all backgrounds build meaningful connection and communicate constructively.

2017: Topeka Prison Project - Blues Behind Bars

PROJECT: a choral ensemble of inmates at the Topeka Correctional Institute rehearses and performs under the direction of an acclaimed blues artist.

Rita Chiarelli is an acclaimed award-winning Italian-Canadian blues musician, and a gifted performing songwriter with a soaring three-octave voice. Over the past five years she has released Cuore, a recording of traditional Italian folk songs, which won the World Music category at the prestigious Canadian Folk Music Awards; Uptown Goes Downtown Tonight, a highly acclaimed collaboration with the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra; and Music From the Big House, a documentary movie filmed in Louisiana, at Angola prison, which premiered in New York and LA.

2017: Poetic Justice - Brown Eyes in Blue

PROJECT: a performance collaboration between an emerging band and police of cer/poet to create a soundscape based performance piece.

Octavio “Chato” Villalobos is a celebrated 16-year veteran police officer with the KCPD. His pioneering work in community policing with the Westside Community Action Network has landed him praise and recognition with the International Association of Chiefs of Police. Also a writer, his poem “Brown Eyes in Blue” addresses the complex feelings and sometimes conflicting roles of being a hispanic officer during a contentious era of law enforcement’s relationship with minority communities. In 2016, his poem was recited in a public reading by Juan Felipe Herrera, the first Latino poet laureate of the United States.

Making Movies is a Kansas City-based band founded by Panama-born brothers Enrique and Diego Chi, joined by brothers Juan-Carlos and Andres Chaurand. The band’s sound is based in Afro-cumbia rhythm, and their rich lyrical content is both poetic and political with the combined soundscape an effort to manifest the beautiful reality of a new America. Their sophomore album "I Am Another You" (produced by Steve Berlin of Los Lobos) will be released in 2017.

2016: Joe Crookston

In 2016, FAI proudly welcomed the National World War I Museum and Memorial as its residency partner, and U.S.-based singer-songwriter Joe Crookston as Artist in Residence. Of Hungarian descent, Crookston was raised in Ohio, and currently calls Ithaca NY home. He released his first album in 2004, has toured extensively throughout the U.S. and abroad, and been featured on national radio programs, and received a Rockefeller Foundation songwriting grant. He has four albums, conducts musical tours of Ireland, and is also a painter.

Working with the education team of the Museum to access archived images, letters, and sound recordings over the months of January and February, Crookston has created a new composition inspired by time with this rare material. Working later on site with the Museum, an accompanying selection of images has been prepared to accompany the song.

2015: Brandy Zdan

The inaugural 2015 partner organization is the prestigious Kansas City Ballet. Under the artistic direction of Devon Carney, KC Ballet has been simultaneously exploring new directions with last years’ launch of a New Moves festival, providing an opportunity for national emerging choreographers to create new pieces with resident dancers.

Following an impromptu meeting between Carnery and FAI's Executive Director Aengus Finnan, a fledgling partnership was formed with the idea of bringing an adventurous folk musician into the mix. Enter acclaimed Nashville-based Canadian artist Brandy Zdan, who had earlier explored work with contemporary dancers. Zdan writes, sings, and performs on electric and acoustic guitars, lap steel, and accordion. She has recently stepped forward as a solo artist following over 10 years of international touring, initially as Winnipeg-based Twilight Hotel (receiving 2 JUNO award nominations), and later as a side-woman for Austin-based female super-group The Trishas. Working with KC Ballet’s selected choreographer, LA-based Kelly Ann Sloan, and a company of 10 dancers over the month of January and February, a 12 minute piece entitled Lone Hunter was created and premiered at the Todd Bolender Center for Dance & Creativity in Kansas City. A 6-minute excerpt of the piece was presented with 2 dancers as part of the 2015 conference.